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Authors: Elizabeth Miles

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You know why the Furies left last time?

Not because of a banishment. And not because of a flower.

Because Edie was willing to give up her own life for yours.

Love. It’s why they kept me from JD.

Because love is the only thing that can kill them.

A scream. A piercing scream that ripped through time, thoughts, space, reality. A silvery scream.

A strong wind began to blow, sucking her out of this world and into another. Stronger and stronger, like a hurricane. A shrieking darkness spiraled around her. The cloudy vapors contained Meg’s and Ali’s leering faces. Their eyes were glass; their bones showed through their perfect skin. She couldn’t look away—she was being sucked into their vortex. Time seemed to be collapsing in on her, heavy and charged.

The dark ocean around her turned to bright, bright white.

She heard voices.

You’ll never be rid of us.

We tried to teach you a lesson.

The words were a patchwork of sinister sounds, a dissonant chord of desperation.

Em could practically hear them scraping against the dirt, trying to keep their footing.

She watched from outside herself—from nowhere, or everywhere—as Ty started screaming. Her precious white flower began to shrivel. In an instant, the petals withered to a papery brown. And Ty began to transform. Her eyes smoldered, dark red and black, like coals. She wavered, twisting in the breeze. Em saw it but also
felt
it, as intimately as if her own body were disintegrating into thin air.

“She didn’t get what she wanted,” she heard Crow say.

Then there was a huge burst of flame, rocketing them all off their feet. An explosion. The orchids. The Furies’ faces. The silhouette of a tree—black against a charcoal sky. An icicle, melting rapidly into a pool of dirty water.

She kissed eternity.

And then, with a final howl, everything went silent.

CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

There was the smell of fresh flowers. But not orchids. No, something lovely, and calming, and
right.

A quiet beeping went on in the background . . . It was the sound of eternity, patiently waiting for her, waiting for her, waiting . . .

Em’s eyes fluttered open.

The house was gone. There was no garden.

Ty, Meg, and Ali were gone too. A ripple of relief washed over her, tickling her toes. She didn’t know whether to trust the feeling.

Groggily, she lifted her head and blinked several times.

She was in a hospital room. A bouquet of yellow roses, sprays of lavender, and big, bobbing gerbera daisies lay on a table by her head.

And then, seemingly from nowhere, JD was standing over
her, holding out a hand. “You’re awake,” he said with gruff relief. “You’re okay.”

“What—what happened?” Her throat was hoarse.

“They’re gone,” JD said.

“Are you sure? What about Crow? And Melissa?” Em said, struggling to sit up. She wanted them all to be okay.

“They’re fine. You’re at the hospital. Your parents are just downstairs getting coffee—you’ve been out for a while.”

The words made Em’s heart soar and her stomach drop simultaneously, leaving an airy, empty space in the middle of her body. “JD,” she whispered. “Am I okay? Are you okay?”

He leaned down to wrap her in a bear hug, and her queries were muffled in his jacket.

“We’re okay,” he said. “All of us. Thanks to you.”

Thank god.
And then he let Em go, but not too far. Cupped her dirt-streaked face in his hands and then put two fingers against her throat, feeling for a pulse. Em felt it beating softly against the pads of his fingers.

“You’re alive,” he said.

He was so close.

A burning sob lodged in her throat.
Please, let it be true.

“Is it . . . Is it really over?” The words floated out of her, as though spoken by someone else.

His face broke into an uncontrollable smile and his hands tightened around her. “Em,” he said. “It’s really over.”

“How . . . ?” she asked.

“I’m honestly not sure,” he admitted. “But you did it, somehow, when you saved Melissa.”

“JD, all that stuff that happened this winter . . . I never meant . . . ” She faltered. How would she ever be able to say how sorry she was?

“I know,” he said, cutting her off by placing a finger on her lips. “You don’t need to apologize anymore.”

They stayed that way for a few seconds, centimeters apart.

And then he leaned in even closer and replaced his finger with his mouth, kissing her the way she’d always wanted him to. Slowly, carefully. She drank him in and kissed him back.
Can you feel this? How right this is?
She knew he could. She melted into him, reaching one hand around the back of his neck and hungrily pulling him closer.

He smelled like dew in the morning, like new growth.

As he pulled away, grinning stupidly, Em squeezed his hand and tugged him back. She put her mouth close to his ear—close enough for her lips to brush against the tiny hairs on his cheek.

“I love you, JD,” she said. Finally. The words felt so natural, so easy to say.

“I love you too, Emily,” he said.

And they kissed again—a kiss better, deeper, and sweeter than revenge.

EPILOGUE

The bell on Emily’s windowsill issues a tiny
ding
. She looks up at it, smiling, and scribbles a note on a scrap of paper. Drops it into the basket on her end and pulls it over to JD’s house. She watches him come to the window, pluck the paper from the basket, and read it.

“You’re on, Winters!” he shouts from less than a hundred feet away. “I accept your challenge. What time?”

“After dinner! My mom is making pizza.”

He holds up a finger and moves from the window. When he returns, he is holding a pen, with which he writes a response. The basket creaks its way back over to Em’s side of the line. She feels like giggling the entire time.

Save room for popcorn,
JD’s note says.
It’ll be your consolation prize after I beat you in Scrabble.

“You wish!” she yells.

He flashes her a grin before disappearing; Em turns back to her laptop, where Crow’s demo album is playing. He’s moved to Boston, into an apartment with a few musicians he knows from Berklee. She and Crow text sometimes.

Em smiles with a trace of nostalgia.

He is doing well—not drinking, not smoking, and getting some gigs with his new band. One of the songs has even been getting some radio play around Boston. It’s her favorite.

It’s called “Emily.”

ELIZABETH MILES
lives in Portland, Maine, and writes for an alternative newsweekly.
Fury
is her first novel. Visit her online at
elizabethmilesbooks.com
, find her on Facebook (
facebook.com/elizabethmileswrites
), and follow her on Twitter (
twitter.com/milesbooks
).

THEY’RE ALWAYS WATCHING.

SIMON PULSE
• Simon & Schuster, New york

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ALSO BY ELIZABETH MILES

F
U
RY

EN
V
Y

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This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

SIMON PULSE

An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division

1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020

www.SimonandSchuster.com

First Simon Pulse edition September 2013

Copyright © 2013 by Paper Lantern Lit

All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

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.

Designed by Hilary Zarycky

Jacket designed by Jessica Handelman

Jacket photo copyright © 2013 by Jill Watcher

The text of this book was set in Bembo.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Miles, Elizabeth, 1982–

Eternity / by Elizabeth Miles. — First Simon Pulse hardcover edition.

p. cm.

BOOK: Eternity
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